
(Image: Shutterstock.com)
WASHINGTON (AP) — Students with disabilities must be given a fair shot to play on a traditional sports team or have their own leagues, the Education Department says.
Disabled students who want to play for their school could join traditional teams if officials can make “reasonable modifications” to accommodate them. If those adjustments would fundamentally alter a sport or give the student an advantage, the department is directing the school to create parallel athletic programs that have comparable standing to traditional programs.
“Sports can provide invaluable lessons in discipline, selflessness, passion and courage, and this guidance will help schools ensure that students with disabilities have an equal opportunity to benefit from the life lessons they can learn on the playing field or on the court,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in a statement announcing the new guidance Friday.
The groundbreaking order is reminiscent of the Title IX expansion of athletic opportunities for girls and women four decades ago and could bring sweeping changes to school budgets and locker rooms for years to come.
Activists cheered the changes.
“This is a landmark moment for students with disabilities. This will do for students with disabilities what Title IX did for women,” said Terri Lakowski, who for a decade led a coalition pushing for the changes. “This is a huge victory.”
It’s not clear whether the new guidelines will spark a sudden uptick in sports participation. There was a big increase in female participation in sports after Title IX guidance instructed schools to treat female athletics on par with male teams. That led many schools to cut some men’s teams, arguing that it was necessary to be able to pay for women’s teams.
Education Department officials emphasized they did not intend to change sports traditions dramatically or guarantee students with disabilities a spot on competitive teams. Instead, they insisted schools may not exclude students based on their disabilities if they can keep up with their classmates.
Federal laws, including the 1973 Rehabilitation Act and the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act, require states to provide a free public education to all students and prohibit schools that receive federal money from discriminating against students with disabilities. Going further, the new directive from the Education Department’s civil rights division explicitly tells schools and colleges that access to interscholastic, intramural and intercollegiate athletics is a right.
The department suggests minor accommodations to incorporate students with disabilities onto sports teams. For instance, track and field officials could use a visual cue for a deaf runner to begin a race.
Some states already offer such programs. Maryland, for instance, passed a law in 2008 that required schools to create equal opportunities for students with disabilities to participate in physical education programs and play on traditional athletic teams. And Minnesota awards state titles for disabled student athletes in six sports.
Increasingly, those with disabilities are finding spots on their schools’ teams.
“I heard about some of the other people who joined their track teams in other states. I wanted to try to do that,” said Casey Followay, 15, of Wooster, Ohio, who competes on his high school track team in a racing wheelchair.
Current rules require Followay to race on his own, without competitors running alongside him. He said he hopes the Education Department guidance will change that and he can compete against runners.
“It’s going to give me the chance to compete against kids at my level,” he said.
Some cautioned that progress would come in fits and starts initially.
“Is it easy? No,” said Brad Hedrick, director of disability services at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and himself a hall-of-famer in the National Wheelchair Basketball Association. “In most places, you’re beginning from an inertial moment. But it is feasible and possible that a meaningful and viable programming can be created.”
Featured image Denis Kuvaev via Shutterstock.com.





















































































































Comments (78)
Clegg72
Jan. 27, 2013 at 1:07pmSo, I’m not disabled, but I’m not good enough to make a school team. Even though I could play a sport in a community sponsored league, should I also expect my school to provide a league for me to play in at taxpayer expense?
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Rick Steele
Jan. 26, 2013 at 2:36pmHow do you tackle a guy…..in a wheelchair?
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Smokey_Bojangles
Jan. 27, 2013 at 12:16amYour team has the next Micheal Jordan who cant get a scholarship because The Next Stephen Hawking is on the Basketball Team.
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STEEEEVE53
Jan. 26, 2013 at 10:03am“Dear parent: We are sorry to inform you that we find it necessary to delay the implementation of the new security measures for your child’s school, as we must use the money to pay the coach of our new one-legged soccer team.”
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dallenh
Jan. 26, 2013 at 7:53amEveryone is the same, Everyone gets a trophy, Nobody is a failure, and thus they never learn to deal with failure. When it comes, they sometimes return to the school, home, or place of work with a gun.
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Tex Expatriate
Jan. 25, 2013 at 9:23pmThis proposal is not designed to go anywhere. Like so many Democrat proposals it is designed to secure the votes of the foolish. If it did, by some miracle, get codified into law, all good kid atheletes would go compete in church and other private leagues.
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taintso
Jan. 25, 2013 at 7:58pmWho is going to insure the schools? Or does Obamacare cover disabled students in competitive sports? Are the taxpayers going to foot the bill when they get hurt and the parents sue?
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brtmchl30
Jan. 25, 2013 at 7:56pmI am sure most parents of disabled children aren’t agreeing with this because they are worried about the obvious. Their child may get hurt or suffer further disabilities. But i know there is a small group that want to make a statement. But why should we always lower the bar to fulfill the small minority? Mediocracy is the standard now a days. The majority always seem to suffer at the hands of the few. I’m tired of the government or state always feeling like they have to do something because someone complained. What happens to the newly disillusioned athlete when he cant make the team on zn outdide of school program. Maybe sports will all become privatised and abolished in schools. I expect nothing less from government. No child left behind, school classes too large to be effective, half the class doesnt understsnd english and gets no help at home because the parents speak none, children that are led to believe the are no different than anyone else and are forced upon teachers when they cleary need more attention. There are no standards and nothing to strive for. Doing your best, aiming high, healthy competition is good for the soul. Winning and losing are important things to learn. We are taking away both and replacing it with nothingness. We push kids through school taching them why try. Give them a tropht based on no merit and wounder why are kids feel entitled. Didn’t lanza say ” i just wanted to feel something” ?
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taintso
Jan. 25, 2013 at 7:54pmDoes 80 days around the block, by the cerebral palsy marching band ring a bell?
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ALL4FREEDOM
Jan. 25, 2013 at 7:49pmEnd organized athletics in schools. Just provide a field and a pile of equipment and let the kids play however they want.
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desert buckeye
Jan. 25, 2013 at 7:13pmDoes this mean that I can now play in the NBA?
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dosdelgados
Jan. 25, 2013 at 7:05pmI want to e a Rockette but I’m only 5 feet tall.
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PrivateSectorContractor
Jan. 25, 2013 at 6:36pmJust like the Dumbocrats did in the 1970′s with the Boy Scout of America when changing our high standards to become an EAGLE Scout ( being physically fit, swimming, lifesaving, survival hiking and camping) by initiating a second set of lower standards just for intercity kids, belittled the EAGLE Award. I felt cheated.
When people in wheel chairs can become TOMCAT pilots, then and only then will change my opinion. Unfortunately we are all not born the same with all our facilities in place and functioning properly. To make a sport accept people with disabilities is unfair also to those without. Where is it in the Constitution that government has the right to intervene.
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dosdelgados
Jan. 25, 2013 at 6:33pmIt’s not enough that everyone gets a trophy, now everyone makes the team?
I read a short story in 10th grade about a utopian society…to make everyone equal, people’s hearing would be disrupted by a series of beeps throughout the day. Vision was reduced for those with erect eyesight with obstructing glasses. They punished everyone on various levels to be “fair.” I read this in 1999. I sure wish I knew what it was called! I just remembere this as I was reading the article.
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Larry E
Jan. 25, 2013 at 6:07pmI can remember back over 60 years ago articles in the old Weekly Reader school newspaper about government aid to schools. Those who opposed it said that if schools started taking national government money pretty soon they’d be getting told what to teach and do. Naturally the old time progresso-commies said that’d never happen. Guess who was 100% correct?
In that time the national government has stuck their nose into education until their whole bodies are now in every classroom in the country that receives their financing. During this time the American student has fallen farther and farther behind their fellows in other countries.
What a success! Arne Duncan go sit in the corner with the dunce cap on your little pointy head.
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forthepeople
Jan. 25, 2013 at 5:34pmSee what happen when you give then an Inch ?
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brtmchl30
Jan. 25, 2013 at 5:18pmWhy? People are going to get hurt even when they ban tackle football, promoting flag or touch. You can’t lower than athletes expectations. Go all out, strive to win, do your best. It’s all bull if you have to go all out, unless you may hurt, embarass, or win when challenged by a disabled athlete who ( I know I am not PC enough to still be a member of society ) doesn’t belong there. Are you supposed to tackle a child with Downs? Should you swim and show up a child without legs? Should you spell the word correctly when yhe challenger happens to be mentally retarded. Should you plow into the catcher when he is blocking the plate with his wheelchair? Spike the volleyball into an autistic child’s face? Run laps around the child with narcolepsy? No lefties I am not a Neanderthal. ( I sincerly apologize to all cavemen.. I mean caveperson’s ) This social experimentaion is getting rediculous, and quite frankly undermining acheivment. Dems are taking giving show up trophies to a dangerous level.
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Larry E
Jan. 25, 2013 at 6:11pmNo lefties, huh, because it handicaps the right handers? My #2 son is left handed and left footed so that when he played soccer as a kid everyone expected him to use his right foot and were in for a BIG surprise. He upset the bigger guys too, by laying them out on the deck with his moves.
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brtmchl30
Jan. 25, 2013 at 7:23pm@ larry. Lefties? I was talking about left wing or liberal not left handed. I don’t think they would qualify as disabled. Many major league bullpens are filled with disabled players then. And please no one site Abbott he was an exception to the rule
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Southernsoul
Jan. 25, 2013 at 5:11pmReally? And what position on the baseball team will the blind kid be going out for, pitcher, catcher, 1st base? Think the quadriplegic Quarterback will be elected Home Coming King? The left has gone beyond ridiculous and jumped deep into moronic.
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wingnut1955
Jan. 25, 2013 at 5:08pmMy question is who is going to pay for the parallel sports leagues? How are they going to find enough handicapped children to make up a team? I think that the schools will just cancel sports all together because they can’t comply to this stupid regulation.
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theBru
Jan. 25, 2013 at 4:39pmduuude, I am with the goobermint and am here to hepp ya!!! Please, let me hepp ya…It’s for your own good…those pesky circle flies are awfully hard to fool…
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Chuck7884
Jan. 25, 2013 at 4:31pmThis is about more money for schools. nothing else
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ScottG-CO
Jan. 25, 2013 at 4:22pm“Sports can provide invaluable lessons in discipline, selflessness, passion and courage, and this guidance will help schools ensure that students with disabilities have an equal opportunity to benefit from the life lessons they can learn on the playing field or on the court,”
IF this were true, the schools wouldn’t be passing out participation trophies and would start KEEPING SCORE again!
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